Just now noticing this??? LMAO
xradeon
Eh, it's just exchanging what brain cells are used to remember what.
With Fahrenheit you need brain cells to remember that 32Β°F is freezing point of water. With Celsius, you need brain cells to remember that 40Β°C+ is super hot outside.
If I don't own the product after purchase, the button shouldn't say "buy/purchase" it should say "rent".
I do like the idea of industry standard license.
My thoughts are:
- They need to limit EULAs to something like 600 words.
- Make them binding and non-changing to the product purchased, only newly purchased products can get the updated EULA.
- They should make a Ethics Policy (things like no cheating, be kind, no swearing, etc.) separate from the EULA. This Ethics policy can be updated whenever.
"I'll show you a gateway to heaven!" punch
Still doesn't matter if something is "heavily taxed" because regardless of how much tax, you'll never own more in taxes than you made. So if you got a 10,000 bonus and it was heavily taxed at 60 percent, you don't somehow have to pay like 15,000 in taxes or something on it. You pay 60% of 10,000, leaving you with 4,000 left over. This is typically done before you even see the money, if not ensure that you keep funds aside to pay for the tax.
Also looking briefly at Japan, it appears that their income tax is a bracket based system similar to the US. So again, even if you go up a bracket, you'll never own more taxes than you make. Honestly, people need to stop thinking in brackets when it comes to taxes, all you need to worry about is your "effective tax rate." That's it, you don't need to worry that your income pushed you into a 29% tax bracket or whatever. All that matters is your effective tax rate is 24.2% or whatever. You'll never own more money because you "moved" into a higher bracket, because that's not how that works.
Preferably don't. But if you had to, perhaps a 3d version using unreal but with the style of the box art.
Make sure the "Get the latest updates as soon as they're available" is off. I think it's off by default. That setting will reboot your computer no matter what as soon as the update is done installing.
How is it fiddly for Windows users?
What do you mean by that? Generate a new private/public key pair every time you setup a new TPM? Or when you boot the system or something?
WOOOW βππ€